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[email protected] 20-02-2004 06:13 PM

best burr grinder?
 
My old grinder quite this morning so I'm in the
market for a new one. Any recommendations?
Any brand/model to avoid? TIA

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Katherine Becker "As god is my witness
I thought turkeys could fly"
NEVER SEND A FERRET TO DO A WEASEL's JOB --WKRP

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

[email protected] 26-02-2004 06:23 PM

best burr grinder?
 
Many thanks for the info.

On Mon, 23 Feb 2004, Larry Coon wrote:

> wrote:
>
> > My old grinder quite this morning so I'm in the
> > market for a new one. Any recommendations?
> > Any brand/model to avoid? TIA

>
> I can offer my experience with my current one -- it's the
> Capresso that retails for $50 US from Williams-Sonoma (not
> the one that currently sells for over $100). Here's a
> link:
http://www.capresso.com/prod_grind_burr.html
>
> The control for the grind is fine, but I'm not happy with
> the control for the amount of coffee to grind in one run.
> I like to grind exactly enough for one pot, which is pretty
> much at the farthest end of the control wheel. So if I
> want to grind a little less, I really don't have an option
> to, and there really isn't enough sensitivity to "fine
> adjust" the amount of coffee. If I want to brew a precise
> amount, I have to grind a larger amount and then use a
> measuring spoon.
>
> The bean-holding area is covered but not airtight, so you
> can't really leave beans in there for very long.
>
> It's a little messy. The grind-catching carafe pulls away
> from the front, which invariably results in some spillage
> on the countertop. The opening from the unit to the
> grind-catching carafe gets clogged pretty easily, and has
> to be cleaned regularly. And if any grinds are left on
> the contact area between the caraffe and the unit, it can
> make it difficult to click the unit in place -- if you're
> not careful, and there's not a good seal around the opening
> through which the grinds shoot, then a big mess results.
>
> The feed from the bean-holder into the grinding mechanism
> is just gravity, so if the beans are arranged just-so then
> it'll grind for a while without any beans falling in. Since
> the grind is time-based, the result is less coffee being
> ground than you want. For best results, I tap/shake the unit
> lightly while it's grinding.
>
> Finally, I don't think this can be helped, but the unit IS
> pretty noisy. I'm usually the first one up & downstairs to
> make coffee, and the grinder wakes my wife up. I think ANY
> grinder is going to be noisy, so this isn't a problem
> specific to this grinder.
>
> All in all, it does the job and isn't very expensive, but
> there are definitely features I wish were improved. However,
> I really haven't tested a lot of other grinders to see if
> there are others (especially at the same price) that do the
> job any better.
>


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Katherine Becker "As god is my witness
I thought turkeys could fly"
NEVER SEND A FERRET TO DO A WEASEL's JOB --WKRP

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Larry 27-02-2004 12:29 AM

best burr grinder?
 
wrote:

> My old grinder quite this morning so I'm in the
> market for a new one. Any recommendations?
> Any brand/model to avoid? TIA


Well, since you still haven't advised of your price range, I'll
recommend my Ditting 800. It's the closest thing I've found yet to a
perfect machine. But then it cost $1100, so it should be that good.

-- Larry


[email protected] 27-02-2004 03:55 PM

best burr grinder?
 
Sorry, I was called out of town unexpectedly and am just
now getting back to unfinished business. I'd like to know
more about your Ditting 800 -- what makes it the perfect
machine? What makes it cost $1100? Thanks.

On Thu, 26 Feb 2004, Larry wrote:

> wrote:

>
> > My old grinder quite this morning so I'm in the
> > market for a new one. Any recommendations?
> > Any brand/model to avoid? TIA

>
> Well, since you still haven't advised of your price range, I'll
> recommend my Ditting 800. It's the closest thing I've found yet to a
> perfect machine. But then it cost $1100, so it should be that good.
>
> -- Larry
>
>


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Katherine Becker "As god is my witness
I thought turkeys could fly"
NEVER SEND A FERRET TO DO A WEASEL's JOB --WKRP

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Larry 01-03-2004 06:58 PM

best burr grinder?
 
On Fri, 27 Feb 2004 08:55:03 -0600, wrote:

>Sorry, I was called out of town unexpectedly and am just
>now getting back to unfinished business. I'd like to know
>more about your Ditting 800 -- what makes it the perfect
>machine? What makes it cost $1100? Thanks.


It's extremely solid mechanically, and thus perfectly consistent from
one batch to the next. The dial settings are accurate and repeatable
right out of the box. It mills extremely consistently down to Turkish
grind, and processes a pound of beans in less than one minute.

See
http://www.ditting.com/ditting_coffe...der_models.htm. Mine is
the KR 804.

-- Larry


ukwill 07-05-2004 05:52 PM

best burr grinder?
 
If it is for espresso based beverages the very best grinders are made by
Mazzer of Italy


pltrgyst 08-05-2004 03:08 AM

best burr grinder?
 
On Fri, 07 May 2004 12:52:45 -0400, "ukwill" > wrote:

>If it is for espresso based beverages the very best grinders are made by
>Mazzer of Italy


Surely you mean to limit your statement to grinders with dosers?

-- Larry



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